Ramirez lifts Red Sox past Twins

BOSTON (Ticker) -- Manny Ramirez picked the best time to snap
out of a slump.

Ramirez had two hits and drove in the only run with an
eighth-inning single through a drawn-in infield to score Dustin
Pedroia and give the Red Sox a 1-0 win over the Minnesota Twins
on Monday night.

It was Boston's major league-best 10th shutout win of the
season.

Pedroia started the winning rally with a double to left off
Brian Bass (3-3) that extended his hitting streak to a
career-best 15 games.

Ramirez, who was named to his 12th American League All-Star team
on Sunday, had entered the game mired in a 2-for-19 tailspin
over his previous seven games.

"I didn't care who it was, just push a run across and make it
stand," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said. "But it was great.
We needed something, anything, so we can leave here on a night
with a little frustration, offensively, but we got a win. It's a
lot more fun to talk about how we can do things better after a
win."

The Twins elected to pitch to Ramirez, with first and second
base open and one out in the eighth.

"How's Manny been doing lately? We'll take our chances," Twins
manager Ron Gardenhire explained. "He's a great hitter but you
don't want to walk him and get to the next guy. Keep putting
more people on base at this ballpark, I don't think that's too
wise either. Manny, (Mike) Lowell, (Kevin) Youkilis, pick your
poison."

Alexi Casilla extended his hitting streak to 14 games for the
Twins, who had their five-game winning streak snapped.

For the first seven innings, the game was a scoreless stalemate
thanks to Boston's Daisuke Matsuzaka and Minnesota starter Scott
Baker.

Each team had their chances with the bases loaded over the first
six innings but neither could capitalize.

With two outs in the first, the Twins threatened when Joe Mauer
walked, Justin Morneau grounded an infield single to third and
Jason Kubel walked. But Matsuzaka escaped trouble when Delmon
Young hit the first pitch he saw back to the mound for an the
inning-ending out.

Matsuzaka then settled in, retiring the side in order in the
second and third and allowing just two hits over the next five
innings.

The Red Sox had an even better chance against Baker in the
fourth. J.D. Drew and Ramirez opened with singles that put
runners on the corners with none out. Lowell struck out on a
nasty slider before Youkilis walked to load the bases, but Coco
Crisp fouled out to third and Jason Varitek flew out to center
to end the threat.

Crisp came close to giving the Red Sox the lead in the seventh
but Denard Span went to the warning track in right field and
robbed him of a home run.

"There's no breaks in that lineup," Baker said. "There's no
gimmes. Obviously, with them playing at home, they play very
well here. I gave it everything I had. We made some great
defensive plays, allowing me to continue to pitch and pitch into
the seventh inning."

Matsuzaka allowed just six hits and struck out five while
walking three and hitting a batter over 7 1/3 innings.

"He did have his command and it makes my job a lot easier,"
Varitek said of Matsuzaka. "For some reason, the ball came out
great. He was through the strike zone pretty consistently. I
think our bats were a little slow, getting in late and we needed
a solid pitching performance and we got that."

"His fastball was just electric and coming out of his hand real
good. He was hiding the ball good," Span said of Matsuzaka.

Baker held the Red Sox scoreless over seven innings, allowing
just five hits.

Boston reliever Hideki Okajima (2-2) pitched his way out of
bases-loaded jam in the top of the eighth to earn the win.

Bass was not as fortunate in the bottom half when Pedroia
drilled his first pitch for a double just inside the left field
foul pole to open the inning. After J.D. Drew grounded out to
move Pedroia to third, the Twins elected to pitch to previously
struggling Ramirez.

Ramirez fell behind two strikes before evening the count at 2-2.
The All-Star slugger then hit a fastball through the hole on the
right side of a drawn-in infield to score the go-ahead run.

"I made a couple of good pitches to him in, but he just managed
to foul it off, foul it off and then made a mistake over the
plate and he slapped one to right," Bass said.

Lowell said he wasn't surprised the Twins elected to pitch to
Ramirez, Boston's RBI leader with 54.

"Manny hasn't really been tearing the cover off the ball but
that just goes to show you that even when he's not going well,
he's someone that's very dangerous in those situations," Lowell
said.

Jonathan Papelbon pitched the ninth for his 26th save in 30
chances.

"Any loss is tough but to get (beat) 1-0 like, lose it late in
the eighth inning and have Papelbon come out and shut us down in
the ninth is a tough one," Bass said.